It was one year ago this week – February 7, to be exact – that President Obama signed the “Swiss Army Knife” farm bill into law.
“Despite its name, the farm bill is not just about helping farmers,” President Obama said at the signing. “Secretary Vilsack calls it a jobs bill, an innovation bill, an infrastructure bill, a research bill, a conservation bill. It’s like a Swiss Army knife.”
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack outlined some of the many ways USDA has implemented that multifaceted tool in the past year during a press conference Thursday. “I think by all measures this has been a successful first year implementation,” said Vilsack. “I think it pushes back on the notion that things are broken in Washington or that government is not working.”
Some of the Farm Bill implementation by the numbers:
4,000 – number of listening sessions and engagement events with stakeholders
226,772 – number of producers who received disaster assistance
23,000 – number of dairies enrolled in the new Margin Protection Program
115 – projects under the Conservation Partnership Program
$200 million – in conservation financial assistance
Another $200 million – for 10 pilot projects to help SNAP recipients get work
200,000 tons – of biomass collected
One – number of Military Veterans Agricultural Liaisons appointed
Joining Secretary Vilsack in the 2014 Farm Bill birthday recognition Wednesday was Ben LaCross, the Michigan fruit farmer who was at the signing of the bill last year; Michael O’Gorman, Executive director of Farmer Veteran Coalition; and Edgar Pruitt, an Alabama farmer who discussed how the Farm Bill is helping producers preserve land and water resources, and support pollinator populations.
Secretary Vilsack and stakeholders discuss 2014 Farm Bill implementationIn the Q&A with reporters, Vilsack was asked about cuts in crop insurance, how sign up for the new farm bill risk management programs is going, and the status of the definition of “actively engaged.”
Secretary Vilsack Q&A